latest user's comments

I know that feeling. One my first day of college level english, my teacher made us write a letter to her. I thought "oh ok, she just wants to get to know us more". No, turns out, she was studying our way of writing and supposedly our way of talking. She almost failed me when she saw my essays were written in formal english. I was like "you seriously expect me to turn in an essay with the way i talk and write on a normal basis? that's just stupid. what about when you go in for an interview? you never wear casual clothes, you always get dressed to impress"

the tattoo is on my ribcage under my clothes. and I got it because my step mother is a religious nutjob who forces her opinion on everyone and shunned me from that section of the family because of my hethen ways. theres no euphoric feeling...most people don't know I have it. I don't get tattoos to show people I get them becasue they mean something to me.

Actually, you stated that you got the tattoo because of your abuse step mother, so yes, you do get them for other people.

My step mother is an absolute nutjob as well, she lives following a low carb high fat diet and tries to push that ideal towards everyone else, even though it's so scientifically incorrect, though still, I'm not gonna get a tattoo saying "Fuck LCHF!". It's just not worth it. But on the other hand, now you will have a piece of your body to always remember a person you hate - space you could've used for a tattoo in honour of someone you love, something pretty, or something deep.

Look mate, if it can fit a horse's penis (fact, it can), it is not uncomfortable or extra tight on a penis large relative to the human penis. In order for it to even be a slight problem you need to be really well hung.

The creator of the show, Genndy Tartakovsky, was originally from Russia, but his family left the country, and eventually came to the United States.

Much like Rolf from Danni Antonucci's Ed, Edd, n Eddy, the characters' accent is there to represent some of the cultural distance the creators felt when immigrating and adjusting to the american lifestyle, reflected in the actions and mannerisms of the characters.

I'd argue that you're not necessarily in a "rush" to find Dad, since you pretty much immediately find out he's more than capable of taking care of himself. You only really discover he could be in real trouble when you enter that creepy ass vault in which he's a virtual reality prisoner. Also, unless your Speech is decent or you reload saves until you pass all speech checks, you have to do several sidequests for people before they're willing to tell you where Dad went. You could also handwave doing any sidequests as trying to work on better equipping yourself so you can survive the post-apocalyptic hell in which you now find yourself.